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The Marks of the Carnal Christian (3)

The Marks of the Carnal Christian (3)

May 14, 2025 Marion Merriweather Comments 0 Comment

It is a Life of Adulterous Infidelity

James 4:4

“Ye adulterers and adulteresses, know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity with God? Whosoever therefore will be a friend of the world is the enemy of God.”

1 John 2:15-16

“Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world.”

The language of James 4:4 is drastic and austere; there is an irrevocable finality about it. Men may hold two opinions about “the world,” but not so with God. In James 4:4, God at least leaves no Christian any room whatsoever for argument regarding His attitude toward and relationship to “the world,” but declares in words of transparent clarity that any Christian who maintains friendship with the world is guilty of adulterous infidelity in his relationship to Christ.

To realize the truth of God’s pungent statement, the reader needs only to remind himself of what the world is and of its attitude to Christ. “The world” is Satan’s eyes, ears, hands, and feet combined to fashion his most cunning weapon for defeating God by capturing the souls of men. “The world” is Satan’s lair for the unsaved and his lure to the saved to keep them from God. “The world” is human life and human society with God left out.

What, then, should be the Christian’s relationship to the world? The answer is found in the Christian’s relationship to Christ. Christ and the Christian are one. As we have seen, they are joined together in such an intimate union and identification of life that God, the Holy Spirit, does not hesitate to say that the love relationship they bear to each other is one analogous to marriage.

Is it any wonder, then, that God says that friendship with the world on the part of a Christian is tantamount to spiritual adultery and that He brands “the friend of the world” “an enemy of God”? Hobnobbing with the world in its pleasures, entering into partnership with it in its pursuits, fashioning one’s life by its principles, working to carry out its program, all make one an accomplice of the evil one against one’s own Beloved, against the Savior, Lord, and King of one’s life. Such adulterous unfaithfulness in love marks one as a carnal Christian.

But perhaps some reader is still in the dark about what is worldly. He is unclear about what he may have, do, or enjoy. The acid test of worldliness is given in 1 John 2:16. Under the Holy Spirit’s illumination, test your life by it, and you will quickly discern the mark of the worldly.

Worldliness is “all that is not of the Father.” Whatever would not be as appropriate and fitting to Christ’s life in the heavenlies as to the Christian’s life on earth is worldly. Whatever does not come from God and cannot go back to Him with His blessing is worldliness. Such is the negative aspect of worldliness.

It has a positive aspect as well. Worldliness is “the lust of the flesh,” “the lust of the eyes,” and “the pride of life.” Worldliness may be manifested in one’s conversation, in one’s style of hairdress, in the clothes one wears, in the company one keeps, in the pleasures one enjoys, in the books one reads, in the appetites one indulges, in the things one buys, in the ambitions by which one is ruled, and in the activities in which one engages.

Anything which feeds or pampers the flesh, the animal part of man, whether it results in gross sensuality, or in taking the bloom from heart purity, or merely in soft self-indulgence and self-ease, is worldliness. Anything that stains the heart, soils the hands, stings the conscience, and separates one from the joy and sweetness of communion with Christ is worldliness. It is “the lust of the flesh.”

Anything that caters merely to the fashions of this world, that stimulates desire for possession and property, that aims to please men and gain their approval, that keeps the eyes fixed on the lowlands instead of on the heights, on the seen rather than on the unseen, anything that puts a cloud between Christ and the Christian and shuts Him out from one’s vision is “the lust of the eyes.”

Anything that exalts self, that fosters pomp and pride, that clips the wings of the soul so that it grovels in the dust of earth instead of soaring heavenward, that sets the affections upon the wealth, the fame, the honors of earth rather than upon the treasures of heaven, that robs the Christian of his possessions and privileges in Christ, is “the pride of life.”

There can be no confluence between these streams. Their admixture in a human life produces the carnal Christian.

It is a Life of Dishonoring Hypocrisy

Ephesians 5:8

“For ye were sometimes darkness, but now are ye light in the Lord: walk as children of light.”

1 John 1:5-6

“God is light, and in him is no darkness at all. If we say that we have fellowship with him, and walk in darkness, we lie, and do not the truth.”

1 Corinthians 3:3

“Are ye not carnal, and walk as men?“

The carnal man says one thing and does another; his walk does not correspond with his witness; he professes what he does not possess. The carnal man walks as those who make no profession of being Christians and presents them with such a caricature of Christ that he has no power to win them to his Savior.

Does anything more need to be said to prove that the carnal Christian falls far short of God’s best and is not well pleasing unto Him? But there is abundant hope for the believer who, wearied with the conflict, humiliated by the defeat, chagrined by the immaturity, distressed by the fruitlessness, convicted of the infidelity, and pained by the hypocrisy, turns to God and cries out for deliverance from the wretched captivity of carnality into the glorious liberty of spirituality. 

Source: “Life on the Highest Plane” by Ruth Paxson

Hallelujah, Lord, You have made a way of escape. We are not stuck in our carnal existence. You have provided a greater life for us!

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Carnal or Spiritual, Christian
1 Corinthians 3:3, 1 John 1:5-6, 1 John 2:15-16, carnal Christian, Christian discipleship, Christian maturity, Christian sanctification, Ephesians 5:8, friendship with the world, holiness, hypocrisy in the church, James 4:4, Life on the Highest Plane, Ruth Paxson, Soul, spiritual adultery, spiritual growth, walking in the Spirit

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